Credit: Matt Stone

MATTAPAN, MA. - AUGUST 14: Boston Police Commissioner William Gross speaks to the media at the scene of a triple shooting on Deering Road on August 14, 2018 in Mattapan, Massachusetts. (Staff Photo By Matt Stone/ Boston Herald)

Suspects fitted with court-ordered GPS ankle bracelets continue to keep Boston police busy, according to police reports obtained by the Herald. Here are a few examples of parolees in the crime logs:

• On Oct. 29, three people sat in a parked car in Roxbury watching Netflix on a phone when the driver of another car pulled up beside them and opened fire. The alleged shooter turned out to be a suspect in a murder in Dorchester earlier in the day. That suspected gunman — wearing an ankle bracelet — was tracked down Jan. 7 in a Rhode Island motel.

• On Feb. 8, a middle-aged man wearing a faded red pom-pom hat and gray jacket walked into the Venice convenience store — just blocks off the Freedom Trail — and brandished a silver handgun. He allegedly forced the cashier to empty the register of $1,500 and pistol-whipped him before heading out the door. Police linked the GPS-monitored subject to an alleged armed robbery and kidnapping in Saugus as well as an armed robbery in Charlestown, police said. During a search of the suspect’s apartment, police said they found a loaded automatic handgun duct-taped to the bottom of a speaker cabinet.

The DeWitt Community Center confrontation on Aug. 2 — during which bystanders allegedly refused to cooperate with police officers issuing firearm search warrants at the Ruggles Street center — also involved GPS tracking:

• Boston police followed two juvenile males, with a search warrant for one, into the community center, but when the juveniles walked toward the cops, one took off “in a full sprint” down a staircase. After chasing him down, a detective was caught in a one-on-one violent struggle in the building’s lobby.

Reports state a juvenile put his hand on the detective’s gun during the struggle while backup officers were trapped outside, watching through a glass door. Community center staff reportedly refused to let them in to help the detective.

Outside, a pizza delivery man also alerted staff members that officers were trying to get into the lobby. Staff ignored him, police reported.

After 15 seconds, a staff member opened the door and the officers took the suspect into custody. Police reported finding a loaded .22-caliber revolver wrapped in a T-shirt stuffed in the suspect’s backpack.

“I didn’t help you guys cause you know kids are watching,” the report recorded one staff member said on the scene. “I got kids. I don’t want them to think I help the police.”